| Literature DB >> 29089891 |
Paola Palombo1,2, Rodrigo M Leao3, Paula C Bianchi1,2, Paulo E C de Oliveira1, Cleopatra da Silva Planeta1,2, Fábio C Cruz4.
Abstract
Evidence indicates that drug relapse in humans is often provoked by exposure to the self-administered drug-associated context. An animal model called "ABA renewal procedure" has been used to study the context-induced relapse to drug seeking. Here, we reported a new and feasible training procedure for the ABA renewal method to explore the role of the prelimbic cortex in context-induced relapse to ethanol seeking. By using a saccharin fading technique, we trained rats to self-administer ethanol (10%). The drug delivery was paired with a discrete tone-light cue. Lever pressing was subsequently extinguished in a non-drug-associated context in the presence of the discrete cue. Rats were subsequently tested for reinstatement in contexts A or B, under extinction conditions. Ethanol-associated context induced the reinstatement of ethanol seeking and increased the expression of Fos in the prelimbic cortex. The rate of neural activation in the prelimbic cortex was 3.4% in the extinction context B and 7.7% in the drug-associated context A, as evidenced by double-labeling of Fos and the neuron-specific protein NeuN. The reversible inactivation of the neural activity in the prelimbic cortex with gamma-Aminobutyric acid (GABA) receptor agonists (muscimol + baclofen) attenuated the context-induced reinstatement of ethanol self-administration. These results demonstrated that the neuronal activation of the prelimbic cortex is involved in the context-induced reinstatement of ethanol seeking.Entities:
Keywords: context; ethanol; pharmacologic inactivation; prelimbic; reinstatement
Year: 2017 PMID: 29089891 PMCID: PMC5651025 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2017.00725
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810